Hello Brent, I would like to join Dave in welcoming you back from your "extended medical leave." I am happy to hear about the success of your treatment and glad to see you returning to our craft. I have always (from our days in Dallas) appreciated your work and admired your tenacity in performing it! I am now at Baylor University after a six year gig at the Steinway Gallery in St. Louis, so it's been quite a number of years since I've seen you. Congratulations on your return and best wishes in your current endeavors! Drop me a line anytime. sincere regards, Craig Craig Waldrop, RPT Staff Piano Technician Baylor School of Music 254.710.1723 ________________________________ From: caut-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:caut-bounces at ptg.org] On Behalf Of Brent Fischer Sent: Sunday, August 15, 2010 3:22 PM To: caut at ptg.org Subject: [CAUT] music degree for cauts Dear list, It's been some time since I have chimed in, however after a four year medical hiatus and with an implant in my usually empty brain, I now live with a tinnitus level so reduced that I am back to work. The question of a mandatory degree for cauts has certainly raised a few voices here so I will tread with some expectation of ambivalence. I think it is crucial that one has college experience for a number of rudimentary reasons but the necessity of it being a music degree is invalid. My two year degree in forestry and wood science has been more valuable to me than a composition class could have ever been, however, a background in higher education, no matter in what area, is what gives a person some essential knowledge of collegiate expectations. I think from seeing so many techs struggle to find middle C that four years of piano during childhood would serve one the best in our profession. A few centuries ago, when some were taking 300 level music classes I was apprenticing, and while at age twenty-two when many were renting their grad robes I was graduating from the Newton Hunt school of PTG exams, to become a registered craftsman. That path opened many doors that a music degree would never have, so I say some college should be required but no B.A. in Music. My two cents. Incidentally, faculty is usually respectful and appreciative of our own artistry, but don't kid yourself, they don't hang their doctoral degrees on the wall for the janitors to look at. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://ptg.org/pipermail/caut.php/attachments/20100817/55aaaaf9/attachment.htm>
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